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Welcome to Min y Don Guest House

Min-y-Don Guest House is located on the promenade at Llanfairfechan. There is free parking and free Wi-Fi access is available.
Rooms here will provide you with a flat-screen TV, tea/coffee making facilities and a patio. There is a dining area and an iPod docking station. Featuring a spa bath, the bathrooms also come with a shower. You can enjoy a sea view from all the rooms.
At Min-y-Don Guest House you will find a garden and a terrace, ideal for watching the sun set over Anglesey. Other facilities offered include an ironing and laundry service and a vending machine.
With a sandy beach only metres away, Min-y-Don Guest House is also a 5-minute walk from several shops and restaurants. Llanfairfechan Railway Station is a 5-minute walk away. Penrhyn Castle is 8 miles away and the port of Holyhead is 30 miles away.

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Attractions - Min y Don Guest House

Distance 5.37 miles (8.59 km)
This mature Course was designed in the late 1880s by Sir Richard William Bulkeley and measures a deceptive 5.596 Yards in length and is created on mature heathland. The Par 68 Course threads its way cunningly through natural hazards, a river defends three of the holes as it meanders down to the Menai Straits. Baron Hill is free of Bunkers and we are sure once you have played it you will be glad of this bearing in mind each hole is carefully defended by natural hazards such as Oak, Ash Trees, elevated greens and of course the odd Gorse bush! Baron Hill is a thinking golfers course where every club in the bag will be required to breach its defences and the watch word is very much Course Management.

Distance 5.87 miles (9.39 km)
Bangor is a cathedral city of some 18,000 people situated by the Menai Strait in North Wales opposite the Island of Anglesey. The cathedral was built c. 1500 and the University was founded in 1884. The St Deiniol Golf Club (Bangor) was established in 1906. Designed by James Braid, the course offers a fine test of golf. Situated on "Bangor Mountain", this heathland course provides magnificent views of Snowdonia, the Great Orme, Puffin Island and the Menai Strait. Overall, a great place to be. The St Deiniol Golf Course is open all year round. Visitors and parties are especially welcome. The golf course is a full 18 holes: some long, some short, some visible, some not so visible, but all with a certain challenge that the keen golfer will enjoy.

Distance 6.36 miles (10.18 km)
At the heart of Medieval Conwy stands Plas Mawr, the "Great Hall", built between 1576 and 1585 for the Welsh merchant, Robert Wynn. This richly decorated building is an architectural gem, possibly the best preserved Elizabethan townhouse in Great Britain. It dominates the town of Conwy with its gatehouse, stepped gables and lookout tower. This "worthy plentiful house" is especially noted for the quality and quantity of its ornamental plasterwork, now fully restored to its original splendour. Plas Mawr's authentic period atmosphere is further enhanced by furnishings, many original to the house, based on an inventory of the contents in 1665.The interior with its elaborately decorated plaster ceilings and fine wooden screens, reflects the wealth and influence of the Tudor gentry in Wales.

Distance 6.75 miles (10.8 km)
We play in Bangor, North West Wales (not Bangor, Northern Ireland, or Bangor on Dee, which is near Wrexham. Or Bangor, Maine either!). Our Bangor lies on the Menai Straits as the A5 crosses onto Anglesey and is about approximately 50 miles west of Chester. Now playing in the Welsh Premier Football League, Bangor City is one of the most successful teams in the history of Welsh football, having won our national league twice and the Welsh Cup no less than five times. Bangor has also represented Wales in Europe in nine campaigns, playing matches in Italy, Norway, Spain, Poland, Iceland, Sweden, Yugoslavia, Romania and, most recently, Latvia.